London should play up its diversity: IOC

In his final news conference of the Beijing Games on Sunday, the head of the International Olympic Committee said he was “extremely pleased” by China’s organisation.
“We had a splendid village, we had state-of-the art venues, we have an impeccable operation and we had great performances,” Rogge said. “It is clear that China has put the bar very high.”
Despite their efficiency, the Beijing Games have been criticised for an absence of spontaneous celebration, for being heavily stage-managed by China’s authoritarian government and for being slightly dull.
Rogge suggested London could move the bar higher – just by being London, a city where protests in Hyde Park are a tradition and free expression is a birthright.
“There are issues London will not be able to equal,” Rogge said. “It is clear that the ability to bring in hundreds of thousands of volunteers in the different sites ... is something that number-wise is not going to be easy for London.”
Rogge described Britain as the nation that invented modern sports, codified its rules and “brought in the values of fair play and other values. So I think that is the identity that has to be built around London. London is also a very cosmopolitan city, multi-ethnic, multi-cultural, multi-religious so this is something you can also use as an asset.”
Sebastian Coe, head of the London organising committee, has promised London will be fun.
“We are going to work on generating a party atmosphere,” he said a few days ago.
Rogge was pressed by reporters on protest zones, which went unused during the Beijing Olympics because Chinese officials declined to grant permits to any of 77 petitioners. He was also quizzed about Internet access, with many sites remaining blocked throughout the games despite pledges by the IOC and Chinese officials that they would be open.
“We have always urged China to give the widest possible access to the Internet,” Rogge said. “We acknowledge that the situation has not been perfect, but we acknowledge at the same time that the situation was a major change compared to before the games.”
“You should not forget one thing: it is not the IOC running the Internet, it is the Chinese government running the Internet.”
Rogge said the protest zones were not part of the host-city agreement, but a feature Chinese officials agreed to after coaxing by the IOC. He said he “found it unusual” that none of the protest applications were approved.